14A _. The MI.chigan Daily - Thursday, January 21, 1999 Free throws, hostile crowd 0 let elusive road win slip away By Andy Latack Daily Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS - The Williams Arena crowd was making things diffi- cult for Michigan. With 13:01 remaining and Minnesota enjoying its largest lead of the game, 49-35, the 14,748 fans sensed a blowout. It was becoming a pretty familiar feel- ing for the Minnesota faithful. There were many cases last night when thing seemed as if they could turn ugly for the Wolverines, and the fans did their best to help that process along. With so much being made of the dif- ficulty of winning on the road in the Big Ten this season, a home loss could be more crucial than a victory on the road. Winning at home is virtually expected of most teams in the conference, and many of them - including Michigan - have been following suit lately. But last night Michigan - which has won just one game on the road this sea- son against a hapless Eastern Michigan squad - refused to bow to the pressure of playing in a hostile environment. Michigan never let things get out of hand and, just when it seemed like Minnesota was about to run away with the game, Michigan did a little running of its own. After Minnesota forward Quincy Lewis sunk a baseline 3-pointer to give the Gophers the 14-point cush- ion, the Wolverines battled back. Behind the 3-point shooting of guards Louis Bullock and Robbie Reid, Michigan put together a 24-10 run in the next seven minutes. When forward Brandon Smith beat Lewis for a baseline jam to knot the score at 59 with 6:19 to play, Williams Arena sat in stunned silence. On the other hand, Michigan, which had to fight tooth and nail just to keep the game close in the early stages of the second half, was showing some fight uncharacteristic of a team playing in such an adverse environment. "This game tells us. a lot," said Michigan guard Louis Bullock, who scored 23 of his 33 points in the second half, including eight in Michigan's sec- ond-half surge. "Now, we have no excuse because we know we can (win on the road). It builds some confi- dence." Indeed, after losing their previous conference road games by an average of 16 points this season, last night's 76-70 defeat had a pretty significant silver lin- ing. The Wolverines proved to them- selves that they can play on the road. And with a .500 record required for a postseason berth in the NIT, Michigan - now 9-10 - can't afford to keep win- ning only in Crisler Arena. "We've been playing so well at home, and we saw this as a great chance to prove that we can play on the road" said guard Robbie Reid, who finished with 19 points. "We showed a lot of heart get- ting back into it.: Reid and Bullock each hit five 3- pointers, and many of them were momentum-changers. Bullock and Reid were also key in breaking the spee Gophers' full-court pressure, resulting in some easy buckets for Michigan at the other end of the floor. But despite all the good things that Michigan can take from its gutty effort, the fact remains that Michigan could have won this game. If losing by six was a confidence-builder, imagine what a victory would have done for this young team. And the Wolverines didn't even have to play a perfect game to win. With Minnesota shooting just 39 p cent from the field, Michigan applie4 pressure to almost every Minnesota shot. Except those shots that the Wolverines couldn't contest - free throws Minnesota, which came into the game shooting an icy 64 percent from the link for the season, was 34-for-39 from the line yesterday. At one point, Minnesota made 25 consecutive free throws, tying a Big Ten record. Lewis alone finished blazing 15-for-16 from the line. With the Wolverines only attempting 14 free throws in the game and making 10, it was clear to see what made the dif- ference in the game. "We really stepped up and made those free throws," Minnesota coach Clem Haskins said. "We really needed all of those free throws to win this game." LOUIS BROWN/Daily .eon Jones had a tough game for the Wolverines, missing both of his shots from the field, committing two fouls and grabbing ust one rebound. His two points both came from the charity stripe. SM'can take good from road loss GOPHERS 4Continued from Page 10A This may be one lesson that has not sunk in yet for the Wolverines (3-3, 9- 10). Often in this young Big Ten season, they've lived and died by what they did before halftime. When they beat Indiana, they closed out the first half with a seven-point run to get within striking distance. At Michigan State, they coughed up 10 unanswered points and never dug themselves out of the hole. With eight minutes to go in the first half, Minnesota guard Kevin Clark, lwho scored 18 points, beat Robbie Reid (19 points) off the dribble to sink a 15-footer and spark an 18-8 run that would put the Gophers up by six at the half. Minnesota converted'on all 16 of its free throw attempts in the half. The Gophers, who had shot just 64 percent as a team from the line before last night, stayed perfect until Miles Tarver missed a pair with 7:03 left in the game. But Tarver's sins were forgivable n the eyes of Haskins. "What can you say about Miles?" Haskins asked after the game. "He did a great job" of distributing the ball and holding Josh Asselin to just two points. From the start, it seemed as though the Gophers hadn't learned about Michigan center Peter Vignier. The junior sank all four of his first-half shot attempts, all of which were jump hooks. But in the second half, he and the rest of Michigan's big men disap- peared. "We did a great job on the perime- ter" in the second half, Haskins said. "We didn't let the ball go inside." Michigan came back from deficits as large as 14 to tie the score at 59 with 6:19 left to play. Soon afterward, Lewis brought his team and the Williams Arena fans back to their feet with a baseline dunk. Every one of Lewis' seven field goals seemed to fire up the Gopher fans. In the second half, he showed his ability to re-ignite a silenced crowd and Haskins thinks the Gopher fans have yet to see Lewis' best. Bullock, never one to be held back, had a free - and hot - hand all night. "We don't get too many open looks a lot of nights," Bullock said. "If we get more looks we feel confident that we can knock down some shots and be in the game." And last night, for nearly 40 min- utes, the Wolverines were in the game. "We had a lot of poise," Ellerbe said. "We played well but not well enough to win." But maybe good enough to learn something. MICHIGAN (70) MIN M-A -A O-T A F PTS Smith 29 19 0-0 0-1 15 2 Asselin -29 0.3 2-4 0-2 2 4 2 Vignier 30 4-6 0-0 3-7 04 8 Reid 35 7-13 0-0 2-6 6 4 19 Bullock 39 11-21 6-7 0.3 2 3 33 Jones 16 0-2 2-2 0-1 3 2 2 Young 22 2-3 0.1 2-3 0 2 4 Totals 200 25.57 10-14 7-23 14 24 70 FG% .439. FT%:.714. 3-point FOG: 10-24417 (Reid 5-10, Bullock 5-9, Smith (14, Jones 0.1). Blocks: 4 (Smith 2, Vignier, Young) Steals: 7 (Bullock 3, Reid 2, Jones. Young). Turnovers: 15 (Reid 4, Vignier 4, Smith 3, Young 2, Bullock, Jones). Technical Fouls: none. MINNESOTA (76) FO FT REB MIN M-A U-A 04 A F PTS L.ewis 34 7-19 15-16 1-5 1 3 30 Tarver 29 2-3 6-10 4-11 5 1 10 Przybilla 25 4-7 0-0 3.5 1 3 8 Clark 32 5-11 7-7 2-3 2 4 18 Nathaniel 25 1-2 0-0 1-3 0 0 2 Ohnstad 14 0-4 0-0 1-3 2 1 0 Simmons 9 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 2 0 Stanford 7 01 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 Broxsie 12 0-2 0-0 0-1 0 1 0 Sanden 13 1-1 6.6 1-5 0 1 8 Totals 200 20-51 349 13-3612 17 76 FG%:.392. FT%:.872. 3-point FG: 2-11,_182. (Lewis 1-6, Clark 1-2, Ohnstad 0-2, Simmons 0.1). Blocks: 8 (Przybilla 2, Lewis 2, Nathaniel 2. Tarver, Broxsie). Steals: 10 (Nathaniel 3, Przybilla 3, Broxsie, Simmons, Tarver). Turnovers: 12 (clark 3, Broxsie 2, Lewis 2, Ohnstad 2, Przybilla, Simmons, Tarver). Technical Fouls: none. Michigan.............29 41-70 Minnesota............35 41-76 At: Williams Arena Attendance: 14.748 LOUIS BROWN/Daily Louis Bullock and the Wolverines stayed In the game late, but came up short In the clutch, dropping another Big Ten road - game - this time to Minnesota. Bullock was 5-for-9 from the three-point arc and totaled 33 points In the game. Center Josh Asselin followed up a career game by going 0-for-3 from the field, mustering two total points. Wisconsin badgers Illinois, 75-53 MADISON (AP) -The 15th-ranked Wisconsin Badgers are off to their best Big Ten start in 37 years. But with all the hoopla surrounding .the school's Rose Bowl victory over UCLA, they're just now getting noticed. For coach Dick Bennett, who watched his team rout Illinois 75-53 last night for the Badgers' fifth straight league win, that is nothing new. "I'm used to that - I'm from Green Bay," said Bennett, who used to coach at Wisconsin-Green Bay in the shadow of the Packers. But getting overlooked has its advantages. "You can make your mistakes (early) and they go unnoticed," Bennett said. Jon Bryant, a transfer from St. Cloud State, had five 3-pointers and 17 points to help the Badgers overcome an off- night by leading scorer Sean Mason. Mason got into early foul trouble and finished with only seven points, 12 below his average. Mark Vershaw added 14 points for the Badgers (5-2 Big Ten, 17-3 overall), who won their fifth straight Big Ten game for just the fourth time in the last half-century. "I didn't think we were a good team tonight, but we got great play from a number of individuals," Bennett said. Only two other teams in school histo- ry have won at least 17 of their first 20 games: in 1915-16 and 1940-41, Wisconsin's only national champi- onship team. Cory Bradford scored 18 points for the Illini (0-6, 8-10), who defeated Wisconsin three times last year when they shared the Big Ten regular-season title. NORTHWESTERN 62, PENN STATE 60 (OT): Julian Bonner's jumper - com- ing on an off-balanced, desperation shot just inside the 3-point line with one see- ond left in overtime - lifted Northwestern to an exciting 62-60 v tory last night over Penn State. The Wildcats (3-3, 10-5) scored the first five points of the extra period -- three from Evan Eschmeyer - to go ahead 58-53. The Nittany Lions (1-5, - 7) caught up at 60-all on a layup by Gyasi Cline-Heard with six seconds t6 go. Bonner's winning shot was only his second field goal of the game, both coming in the overtime. Eschmeyer finished with 19 poi. and a career-high 21 rebounds, his fife. straight double-double and 10th of the season. Northwestern dominated the boards, 47-26, with Eschmeyer gettiig 13 offensive rebounds. In regulation, the Lions broke a 51- 51 tie on Cline-Heard's dunk with 2:03 left. But Steve LePore's basket for the Wildcats sent the game into overtime tied at 53-all. s r- : . .: , < ..... ; ' ' , b a ;; ;: N .®... I r:: R; Cal'Eh63 ,s.4 n ar. a Uol l 000 J